saint to their biblical origin. Biblical allusions and citations to Sacred
Scripture appear also in the lives of St. Pancratius (1856), of Blessed Caterina
De-Mattei (1862), of Blessed Maria degli Angeli (1865) and of the drama
dedicated to Saint Alexis (1866).
Devotional and
instructional
writings
The Bible is clearly present in his devotional or instructional writings such as
“The Devotion to the Guardian Angel” (1845), “The Exercise of the Devotion
to the Mercy of God” (1847), “Companion of Youth” (1847), the
corresponding female edition, “The Well-Provided Christian Daughter”
(1878), “The Key to Paradise” (1856), “The Month of May” (1858), the
pamphlet “Bring it with You, O Christian” (1858), and above all, “The Well-
Provided Catholic for the Practices of Piety” (1868).
This latter is a thick compilation of prayers and exercises of devotion made
by Fr. John Bonetti, published under the control of Don Bosco. It contains
about 400 biblical references.
Writings for
entertainment
We should not be surprised if there are only few biblical references in those
writings meant for entertainment such as “A Pleasant Short Story of an Old
Soldier of Napoleon I” (1862) or in theatrical presentations such as “The
House of Fortune” (1865).
Apologetics
After the liberal revolution of 1848, Don Bosco’s preoccupation was the
defense of the faith and of the Catholic Church. His strategy was to prove
that the Catholic religion was founded on the Bible.
In 1853 with the support of the bishop of Ivrea, he launched a periodical
entitled “Catholic Readings (Letture Cattoliche)” whose goal was to
maintain and clarify the faith of the ordinary people and of the youth.
The handbook of Christian formation etitled “The Catholic Instructed in his
Religion”, appeared in 1853. It contained at least 390 biblical citations, a
perfect illustration of his strategy. The book was divided into two parts. The
first part shows a father of the family explaining to his children in the course
of numerous family gatherings the biblical foundation of the Catholic
religion. The second part deals with the true Church of Jesus Christ.
Even the “Il Galantuomo (The Gentleman)”, an almanac offered to the
readers of Letture Cattoliche” usually contains some allusion or citation
from the Bible.
Other writings of an apologetic nature likewise contain references to
Scriptures such as: “Contemporary Facts” (1853), “The Unhappy Life of a
New Apostate” (1853) whose attribution to Don Bosco is uncertain, but
which has many points of contact with “The Instructed Catholic”, “The
Collection of Curious Contemporary Events” (1854), “The Jubilee” ( 1854),
“The Two Conferences about Purgatory” (1857), and “Maximinus or The
Encounter of a Youth with a Protestant Minister (1874).
For the defense of the Church and of her institutions, Don Bosco wrote “The
Life of St. Peter (1856), and the Life of St. Paul (1857), where we find an
abundance of references to the New Testament. Meanwhile the Lives of the
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